[6] "Miami Memory is the story of a couple balancing sex with contemporary family values...It's my gift to my girlfriend, a symbol to hoist on the totem of love."
Reviewers noted that unlike his previous two albums, the songs on Miami Memory touch on positive aspects of the characters, as opposed to only satirizing negative elements.
[6] While GQ's Colin Groundwater said that "Miami Memory is an unabashed love record that explores relationships at their most sentimental moments and their wildest extremes", Anna Gaca of Pitchfork said it is "more outrageous than romantic".
Writing for Exclaim!, Luke Pearson said that Miami Memory is not as good as Cameron's previous release, Forced Witness, but that it is a "mature and surprisingly au courant album that grapples with complex social issues in a commendably fearless way.
Writing for Uproxx, Philip Cosores called Miami Memory "a lyrical miracle", saying that "it's all remarkably even-handed and clear-eyed, with Cameron not shying away from being provocative, while proving more than capable with tacking treacherous subjects with surprising grace.
El Hunt of NME asked rhetorically, "what does Alex Cameron's irony steeped parody of toxic masculinity add to the discussion, beyond demonstrating that he's got some self-awareness?"